Jude

Jude may refer to:

  • Jude, a unisex given name
  • Jude the Apostle, an apostle also called Judas Thaddaeus or Lebbaeus, the patron saint of lost causes in the Catholic Church
  • Epistle of Jude, a book of the New Testament of the Bible
  • Jude, brother of Jesus, who is sometimes identified as being the same person as Jude the Apostle
  • German for Jew
    • Der ewige Jude, a 1940 Nazi propaganda film whose German title means The Eternal Jew
  • Der ewige Jude, a 1940 Nazi propaganda film whose German title means The Eternal Jew
  • Jude Deveraux, female American novelist
  • Jude, a medieval Romanian judge over an area called a Judeţ
  • Jude Law, British actor
  • Jude (singer), an American musician and songwriter
  • Jude the Obscure, a novel by Thomas Hardy
  • Jude (film), a film based on the Hardy novel
  • Jude (novel), a coming of age novel dealing with themes of drugs and prison
  • Jude Lizowski, a character on the Canadian animated series 6teen
  • Jude the Entropic Man, a Marvel Comics character
  • Județ

    A județ (Romanian pronunciation: [ʒuˈdet͡s], plural județe [ʒuˈdet͡se]) is an administrative division in Romania, and was also used from 1998 to 2003 in Moldova, before it returned to raions.

    Județ translates into English as "jurisdiction", but is commonly rendered as county (the preferred term for that being comitat in Romanian).

    There are 41 județe in Romania, divided into municipii (cities), orașe (towns) and comune (communes). Each județ has a capital or county town where local and national institutions are headquartered. The central government is represented by one prefect in every județ.

    Etymology

    In the Romanian Principalities, the județ was an office with administrative and judicial functions, corresponding to both judge and mayor. The word is etymologically rooted in the Latin "judicium", and is therefore cognate to other administrative institutions like the Sardinian giudicati, or terms like jurisdiction and judge.

    In Romanian, the term județ does not take an initial capital unless it is the first word of sentence.

    JPEG

    JPEG (/ˈpɛɡ/ JAY-peg) is a commonly used method of lossy compression for digital images, particularly for those images produced by digital photography. The degree of compression can be adjusted, allowing a selectable tradeoff between storage size and image quality. JPEG typically achieves 10:1 compression with little perceptible loss in image quality.

    JPEG compression is used in a number of image file formats. JPEG/Exif is the most common image format used by digital cameras and other photographic image capture devices; along with JPEG/JFIF, it is the most common format for storing and transmitting photographic images on the World Wide Web. These format variations are often not distinguished, and are simply called JPEG.

    The term "JPEG" is an abbreviation for the Joint Photographic Experts Group, which created the standard. The MIME media type for JPEG is image/jpeg, except in older Internet Explorer versions, which provides a MIME type of image/pjpeg when uploading JPEG images. JPEG files usually have a filename extension of .jpg or .jpeg.

    Chopper

    Chopper may refer to:

    Transportation

  • Helicopter
  • Chopper (motorcycle), a type of customized motorcycle
  • Raleigh Chopper, a model of bicycles
  • Chopper bicycle, a customised bicycle stylistically modelled after the motorcycle
  • A nickname for the British Rail Class 20 locomotive
  • Technology

  • Chopper, a nickname for a Thompson submachine gun
  • Comet Hopper, a mission proposed to NASA and known as CHopper
  • Chopper (archaeology), a type of crude stone tool
  • Chopper (electronics), a switching device
  • Chopper (propeller), a design for boat propellers
  • Cleaver, a large meat knife
  • Meatchopper coupling, a railway train coupling
  • Optical chopper, a revolving disk with cut-outs to modulate light
  • The part of a mechanical siren (noisemaker) that rapidly cuts the flow of air to make a sound, closely fitted to the stator assembly
  • Entertainment/Film

  • Chopper (film), a 2000 Australian semi-autobiographical film by and about Mark Brandon "Chopper" Read
  • Chopper I, a 1988 video game developed by SNK Playmore
  • Chopper (film)

    Chopper is a 2000 Australian crime film written and directed by Andrew Dominik and based on the autobiographical books by Mark "Chopper" Read. The film stars Eric Bana as the title character and co-stars Vince Colosimo, Simon Lyndon, Kate Beahan and David Field. It has a cult following.

    Plot

    In and out of jail since he was 16, Melbourne standover man Mark Brandon "Chopper" Read (Eric Bana) is serving a 16-year sentence for kidnapping a supreme court judge to get his childhood friend, Jimmy Loughnan (Simon Lyndon), out of the notorious H Division of maximum security Pentridge Prison. To become leader of the division, he ignites a power struggle which gains him more enemies than admirers. Eventually, even his gang turn their backs on him and Loughnan stabs him several times in a failed assassination attempt. Chopper voluntarily has his ears cut off by a fellow inmate in order to be transferred out of the H Division; this also gains him recognition in and out of the prison.

    He is released in 1986, revisiting enemies and friends whom he cannot differentiate anymore. He reunites with his former girlfriend Tanya (Kate Beahan), but suspects that she is involved with one of his old victims, Neville Bartos (Vince Colosimo). He tracks Bartos down, shoots him and takes him to the hospital, unabashedly claiming that he has a "green light" courtesy of the Police "to exterminate scum". When Chopper learns that he is now the target of a death-contract, he goes after his old friend Jimmy, only to find him worn out and poverty stricken by drugs with a daughter and a junkie fiancée who is pregnant with another child.

    Chopper (motorcycle)

    A chopper is a type of custom motorcycle which emerged in the United States in the mid-1960s. The chopper is perhaps the most extreme of all custom styles, often using radically modified steering angles and lengthened forks for a stretched-out appearance. They can be built from an original motorcycle which is modified ("chopped") or built from scratch. Some of the characteristic features of choppers are long front ends with extended forks often coupled with an increased rake angle, hardtail frames (frames without rear suspension), very tall "ape hanger" or very short "drag" handlebars, lengthened or stretched frames, and larger than stock front wheels. The "sissy bar", a set of tubes that connect the rear fender with the frame, and which are often extended several feet high, is a signature feature on many choppers.

    Perhaps the best known choppers are the two customized Harley-Davidsons, the "Captain America" and "Billy Bike", seen in the 1969 film Easy Rider.

    History

    The Bob-Job Era, 1946-1959

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